Back in the days when high fidelity amplifiers were still
made of vacuum tubes, did Julius Futterman inadvertently made the best hi-fi
audio amplifier in the world - the Output Transformerless Amplifier?
By: Ringo Bones
Julius Futterman didn’t set out to build the best sounding
high fidelity audio power amplifier in the world when he built his output
transformerless vacuum tube amplifiers or OTL vacuum tube amplifiers, he was merely
trying to lower the cost of hobbyists building their own high fidelity
amplifiers for home use by eliminating one of the most expensive components of
the hi-fi vacuum tube audio amplifier at the time – the output transformer. But
by eliminating the output transformer in his hi-fi audio amp designs, did
Futterman inadvertently create the – even until this day – the best sounding
vacuum tube audio power amplifier design?
Like Sid Smith of Marantz, Julius Futterman was in the US
Army Signal Corps in World War II. After the war, Futterman became involved
developing a power amp that did not require an output transformer, which was
generally required during the heyday of vacuum tube amplifiers due to the huge
impedance mismatch between the typical output stage of a typical vacuum tube
amp and the dynamic hi-fi loudspeaker connected to it. A typical vacuum tube
amplifier’s output impedance is around 3,000-ohms while recent post World War
II era hi-fi dynamic loudspeakers had an impedance rating that hovers between 8
to 16-ohms.
Julius Futterman’s article “An Output Transformerless Power
Amplifier” appeared in the October 1954 issue of the Journal of the Audio
Engineering Society. Some accounts state that Futterman only sought to reduce
the cost of building vacuum tube power amps in kit form sold to DIY hi-fi
enthusiasts by eliminating the output transformers since – then as well as now
– the output transformers are generally the most expensive single component of
a typical vacuum tube audio power amplifier. Whether increased sound quality
was the motivation by Futterman or just a happy side-effect – a high fidelity
audio miracle was born.
Futterman’s 1954 J.A.E.S. article was followed in 1956 by a
piece describing the commercial implementation of his circuit that was the
first iteration of the Harvard Electronics Amp featured in the article. It
utilized TV sweep vacuum tubes of low cost and long life and was better suited
to high impedance loads like the original 1957 Quad Electrostatic Loudspeaker.
There was a 500-ohm impedance speaker made by Stephens sold to accompany
Futterman’s first commercial OTL tube amp. By the 1960s, Harvard Electronics
was gone and the commercial version of the Futterman amp disappeared with it.
Julius Futterman then started making OTL vacuum tube amps by
hand, refining the design to a level known as the H3AA. It originally used 6AS7
vacuum tubes. When a hi-fi enthusiast decides to restore the Futterman H3AA
these days, he or she can use the Russian military workhorse 6C33C vacuum tubes
and the 6336A / B / C are also good choices and a single one of either vacuum
tube will comfortably replace a matched pair 6AS7 vacuum tubes. Though many here in the Philippines have experimented replicating the Futterman H3AA OTL amp using PL509 vacuum tubes from junked Radiowealth TV sets during the late 1960s and into the 1970s.
During the “evolutionary” refinement of the Futterman H3AA
OTL amp, Dr. Harvey “Gizmo” Rosenberg -who would later become an advocate for
zero feedback single-ended triode amps in the 1990s – was also very
instrumental in his suggestive design input in advancing further the sound
quality of the Futterman H3AA. And the rest is now history.